Seventieth Year EDTED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE-UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. *ANN ARBOR, MICH. *"Phone NO 2-3241 Then Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Omen? a+ AY, JANUARY 7,'1960 AT THE CAMPUS: Polish 1 Film Subject f9 9~ NIGHT EDITOR: KENNETH McELDOWNEY Search for D gniy BANNED IN POLAND, "The Eighth Day of the Week" should be evaluated primarily in non-political terms. Its picture of the work- ers' paradise is hardly the view the Communist arbiters of art would approve. But it is a film that could - with minor alterations - depict the life of the young, and the poor, in any country. Filmed in Warsaw by a Polish-West Berlin cooperative company, the film is based on the frustrations that young love faces in a world which has no room for them. The room means more than a place for love, more than "four walls to himself." The room is a symbol also for human dignity - all that is denied to the youth of post-war Poland. IN A BLEAK and sordid city filled with bleak, sordid, and con- Jested apartments live bleak, defeated people. The old slump or nag of Community College Program Raises Problems I ANTICIPATED expansion of the state com- munity college program will mean that, in the near future, the number of Michigan resi- dents applying as upperclass transfer students to the state's four-year colleges will increase significantly. The state's 15 community colleges - an ad- dition of eight more is contemplated, offer programs "comparable" to the first two years of university education. The program was set up, in part, to offer beginning college programs to the large numbers of qualified students that the four-year institutions cannot presently ac- commodate. But plans must be made by state schools to make provisions for the completion of their education. The rationale behind the commu- nity college idea is that of providing prelimin- ary instruction which would eventually be com- pleted at the University level. AT THE PRESENT TIME the number of these students applying to four year schools has not increased alarmingly, for the program is just getting on its feet. But in the next four or five years, this will obviously have changed. Students will desire -and deserve-admission to the major state- supported institutions - including the Uni- versity. The ratio of transfer students will obviously be affected. State universities, by committing themselves to an endorsement policy for the community college program, are responsible for taking up where the junior colleges leave off. And it has been estimated that this would eventually involve about one half of the two- year graduates. THE UNIVERSITY'S enrollment policy fea- tures "controlled growth;" if the upperclass transfers are accommodated and growth is controlled, the obvious outcome is a propor- tionate reduction in the size of the freshman class. University policy makers maintain, however, that the freshman class won't be reduced, that the transfers will be admitted in as large num- bers as possible, that the ratio between trans- fres and incoming freshmen will remain at the standard~ one to two figure and that total enrollment will be reasonably controlled (28,- 000 is the most recent projected figure.) These. assumptions are incompatible. With controlled enrollment, increased trans- fer admissions cannot possibly be accompanied by proportionately increasing freshman classes. Two and two make four, not three. Whether the University will maintain the MAX LERNER:; ratio at the expense of the transfers or give them priority over freshmen remains to be seen. IF TRANSFERS are admitted in large num- bers and the freshman class is accordingly limited, financial repercussions appear. It has been pointed out that it is considerably more costly to educate an upperclass student than a freshman. The proportionate increase on the junior and senior levels will then require in- creased outlays on the part of the University. How willingly will the state legislature accept this argument for increased appropriations is uncertain. And how else will the University meet the expenses incurred? On the other hand, if a limit is placed upon transfer admissions, questions are raised con- cerning overall responsibility in planning on the part of the state colleges and universities. It seems highly irresponsible of the institu- tions endorsing the community college program to do so if they do not expect to be equipped to accept such students in their junior year. Here, a need for more realistic planning is in- dicated. And with the desired addition of eight more community colleges - this has been called the fastest growing movement in the state - the pressure will increase. SECOND, their actual rather than potential role needs examining. If the education re- ceived at community schools is "comparable" to that provided by the major four-year in- stitutions, students completing the community course should be admitted to full-term schools. But with increasing admissions pressures from all directions, the University, may, consider- ing the possible inferiority of the programs of- fered at community schools, be forced to re- strict admission of these students. The University's responsibilities seem to con- flict - responsibility with academic excellence, desire to select the most qualified and prom- ising applicants with a responsibility to the state for admitting a great part of its educable students and finally, responsibility to the com- munity college program itself. It and its students will suffer most. The program the community college backers have been encouraged to expand is apparently' a thing that their partners in this enterprise - the four year schools - are unable to meet halfway. Partial responsibility for the success of the program falls upon the state universities. Their over-optimism in encouraging expansion cannot be justified in light of the current poli- cy of a stable transfer ratio and an expansion curtailed by philosophy and finance. -CAROL LEVENTEN ' - 4 Ji d, e _.~ z a. .., 11t7. - _Y Copyright. 3454, the Ps~Mli~ P~gMM p St. L~u15 POI&Dwtcb 11 ; 1 . Herblock is away due to illness fondly remember the past. The young drink, make love, and dance to jazz. The hero, an architecture stu- dent, lives in a bombed-out build- ing which collapses one day - the day on which his love is coming, at last, to live with him. Home- less, the boy searches for a place to be alone with the girl he loves. A most agonizingly futile search culminates in his finding a room to himself - too late. The girl has succumbed to another man. Housing shortages may not seem spectacular material for drama, even cinema drama. But the search for a room is also the search for a sober answer to a drunken question, "Is this world of ours a place for lovers?" The question, also posed in the George Orwel novel, "Keep the Aspidistra Flying," is not confined to Warsaw. POLITICAL connotations can- not be avoided, however. The ironies of such a situation in a "Utopian state" are part of the impact which the film makes. Coming out of a crammed hous- ing brueau office, homeless and without promise of -a home,.the boy is faced with a large sign: "We exceed our construction quota 250 per cent." Despite a few hackneyed de- vices, especially the "ships that pass in the night" trick, the film is basicaly sound in both acting and in film technique. The young students express a "deep yearning for a better life" simply and with great dignity. A color sequence in the black- and-white film is an interesting device to convey the wealth sur- rounding the couple while they are locked in the department store basement-wealth they can never attain. Like most devices, it in- terrupts the continuity of the, film rather ° than contributing to its meaning. The eighth day of the week is the day on which dream come true - the day on which the sun finally shines. Even the film's quasi-optimistic conclusion brings that day no nearer for the youth in an impoverished society. -Jo Hardee LETTERS to the EDITOR Arrests .. . To the Editor: THE ARTICLE on homosexuality in the January 5 Daily caused us to wonder what actions are taken if an individual is convicted of homosexual activities. We pro- ceeded to check the state statutes to determine what these actions would be. The "Michigan Statutes Anno- tated, 28.570, stated that homo- sexuality was "gross indecency be- tween males and was considered a felony. The penalty stated in the statutes was either a maximum of 5 years in the state prison or a maximum fine of $2,500. For re- peated offenses the penalty could range from one day to a life sen- tence. * * * IN OUR opinion, these actions are inappropriate retaliation for homosexuality. Homosexuality is a psychological illness or mental dis- order and should be treated as such. If the state has reformed to the point of establishing mental institutions to help those who are mentally ill, why cannot these homosexuals, who are also defined as mentally ill, be admitted to mental institutions and given special care instead of being com- mitted to criminal institutions? When these homosexuals are not given proper care but are put in criminal institutions where they are confined to a small area in an all-male population, there is great- er opportunity to further their homosexual activities. WE FEEL that if the state is going to take any action, it should take the proper action and confine these individuals to institutions that would help to cure them rather than to institutions that would contribute to their illness. -Names withheld by request .' SEVEN ARTS: Jazz from the Outside IS By AL YOUNG Generation Co-Editor (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of a series of articles by Al Young dealing with the socio- psychological aspects of jazz.) I'VE NEVER forgotten the rather cryptic remark that slipped from the lips of a beautiful, sad young English teacher in high school. She was given to staring into space frequently, and to tak- ing a strongly personal, almost intimate interest in her students. One warm afternoon, after the class had patiently waited for her mind to return from one of its spatial excursions, she asked, "What are we going to do about jazz?" "Do about jazz?" a student echoed aloud. "Yes, it really is a problem you know. She had assumed an un- usually sedate demeanor - "Yes, jazz is one big problem." She let it drop that she had known Gerry Mulligan as a schoolboy and the day's lesson was immediately dis- carded by unanimous decision in favor of the topic she had intro- duced. It was all she could do to prevent subsequent classroom ses- sions from slipping into the same groove again. * * * SHORTLY afterwards, she abandoned teaching for being a TV weather girl and has since then, 'tis rumored, married an itinerant drummer and settled down to life on the road. The impression she made on her class was nothing short of won- derful. Quite evidently, she had a broad knowledge of jazz, of music generally - something considered to be revolutionary among us who thought jazz would be the furthest subject from any schoolteacher's mind. "What are we going to do about jazz?" is another of the one thou- sand remarks that sent me to writing these pages. What is this many-headed creature jazz? Now who but what! What are the peo- ple who create and play it, listen to it, build their lives around it? * * * CERTAINLY a music, any mu- sic, serves a function apart from the esthetic. It can very well be a fabric through which we may examine the fibres of a cultural ferment, a people or merely people --if you will. The extramusical aspects of jazz interest me greatly. Jazz affects many of our lives more than we might suspect. Much has been written about the music from musicological, so- ciological, even psychological points of view. Fictionists have drawn freely upon jazz and jazz- men to make stories and novels-- too often bizarre and ludicrous ones. But -little has been written about that evasive little fellow, the listener, the fan (fanatic?) who may not be a musician himself but who spends a good deal of his time listening to jazz. I thought it would make curious, if not in- teresting, reading ' to get down some of my own impressions.. This piece, I hope, will be a modest be- ginning toward a broader, richer work. * * * THERE'S A barbershop on the eastside of Detroit, in the heart of the Negro district, where I some- times go for a haircut. What I like about this particular barbershop is the atmosphere - especially after three o'clock weekday after- noons when everyone is getting off from work and stopping by more often to chat and dig than to get haircuts. In one corner of the shop there is a big wooden stove that has a checkerboard on otp of it when it isn't burning. In another corner, there is a jukebox. A man might come in, fresh out of the factory, feed the jukebox for some of the most provocative Miles Davis, Horace Silver or Count Basie, and at the same time carry on a con- versation from what would seem a different world- "The time my mule got sick and I couldnt lay my crop by in time" or "When I used to slip off at night and be in town hanging around the honky tonk and knowed I had a whippin comin if my folks found out" or "He was the fellow could holler the blues and play the guitar would make you cry. All the women went for him and he didnt never have to work - just picked up enough t'eat and live from makin music. * * * SCENES SUCH as this take place daily. I visit friends out in the backwoods who farm for a living, yet on Saturday nights when ,they drink and play cards or dance, you'll hear as much of Charlie Parker & the MJQ as you will Fats Domino or Bo Didley. The catholicism of these people is natural and unpretentious. They simply know what they like but the forces that have gone into molding their tastes are many and varied. In a way, their roots run deeper than those of the so-called hipster and professional jazz fan -- sometimes deeper than the average musician's. It's a pleasure to move among people like this in this half of the century when too many would-be jazz buffs have the idea that jazz began at Minton's in 1942 and be- fore that came Satchmo. :S The Balancing Posture INTERPRETING THE NEWS: nazism Serves Soviets By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst IT IS EASY to speculate that the Communists are behind the new outbreak of anti-Semitic incidents, hoping to discredit West Ger- many as the time for negotiations over the German future approaches, but the speculation may not be well-founded. In the first place, there is no denying that there are Nazi left-overs in Germany, and neo-Nazi organizations containing hoodlums perfectly JAIPUR, India - There was a recent book on the "American style," based on the valid idea that every civilization has a characteristic way of thinking and of doing things. Ever since I have been in India I have been asking myself what is the "Indian style." No Indian has written about it because Indian scholars are not in the habit of trying to seize their rich and complex civilization as a whole, but an American innocent abroad may be forgiven a brash plunge. What then is the Indian style? Or better, what is the stance of posture with which an Indian confronts any problem? O START WITH, we must clear away one difficulty which distorts our view of the In- dian character. The long and fierce struggle for Indian independence from the British has left in our minds an image of passionate and almost fanatical devotion to a cause. I have no doubt that the element of fanaticism is there in the Indian tradition, and humanists like Nehru have recoiled from its expression in riots and even massacres. Yet I must add that the energy which the Indians showed in the independence movement is now in the history bokos, but you do not find a comparable energy for any cause today. For an historical moment, under great leader- ship, the Indians were caught and stretched beyond their habitual reach. They broke through the shell of theirtradition. Today one seeks in vain for evidences of a. similar spirit. What one finds instead is the balancing posture. India is caught between East and West, between socialism and the free market, between the public sector and the pri- vate sector, between science and superstition, between tradition and innovation, between a closed and open society, between a society of frozen emotions and a happiness society, be- tween fear of Chinese aggression and resis- tance to it, between pacifism and military training, between passivity and action, between the old and the new. IN AN EARLIER COLUMN I wrote of "Nehru as India". More than anyone else in public life Nehru sees and embodies these contradic- light on the Indian posture. Take the non- alignment policy, which is India's chief gift to the theory and practice of world politics. There are good concrete reasons for it in India's geo- graphic and strategic position and its need for economic aid from both sides. Yet Nehru has clung to it with a fervor of conviction that goes beyond the practical needs of policy. There is the same balancing posture in oth- er aspects of the Indian style. The Indian in- tellectuals tend to be Marxist in their econ- omic thought but not in economic policy. The government is anti-Communist in its domestic utterances but it is by no means anti-Russian: in fact the Russians today are basking in the sun of popular approval, along with the Amer- icans and British. E CHINESE alone are unpopular, because they are eating Indian territory. But even in the Chinese case Nehru is caught in a bal- ancing posture: on the one hand he points to the expansionist tradition of the Chinese: on the other hand he insists that China and India have had good relations for thousands of years. If there has been a long tradition of friend- ship, how can he reconcile it with Chinese ex- pansionism? It should be evident that the new factor is the nature of the Chinese Communist regime. But Nehru and the Indians will not have it. They insist that Chinese aggression is Chinese, not Communist. They thus encompass the best of both worlds: hostility to China and friendship to the Communism which everyone recognizes as having transformed China. This tolerance of contradictions is to be found everywhere on the Indian scene and in the Indian character. One meets officials close to the top rank, whose functions depend for their performance on science and technology, yet in their private lives they reserve thei decisions for days favored by the stars. IERE is an obvious clue to this balancing posture, although any student of India will find scores of others. It is in Indian philosophy, which not only tolerates opposites but courts them. Indian philosophy always embraces both poles - negative and positive. nhysical and GOLD-PLATED DOOR: Fear Influences Immigration capable of the acts. The over- whelming popularity of Konrad Adenauer, who has sought zealous- ly to lead German thinking away from such fields, is sufficient evi- dence that these elements are nei- ther representative nor powerful. But in Germany and the rest of the world there are enough extremists who, like anonymous letter writers, are willing to act surreptitiously to create the im- pression of an organized move- ment. Any Communist conspiracy in such a matter would be in con- stant danger of discovery, and the resultant danger to the Commun- ist cause very real. * * * THE COMMUNISTS have always been extremely wary of charges of anti-Semitism, recognizing it as a link to Czarist Russia where the pogrom , was once a well-used weapon of the government to keep the minds of the people off their other troubles. It still exists, of course, and at times has flared to the point where it was clearly discernible even through the Iron Curtain. But the line has seldom been clearly drawn between anti-Semitism and the general running fight which Com- munism carries on against all re- ligions in its effort to stand as a religion within itself. Stirring up hatred is not the Soviet. line today, although the Chinese Communists still go for it in a big way. * * * THERE can be no question, however, that the growing entente between France and Germany is one of the most disturbing sights on the Soviet horizon today. Anything which tends to remind France and Eastern Europe of the character of Germany between 1932 and 1945 is meat for the Soviet stew. The communists can therefore be expected to exploit any anti-Semitic evidence even though they may not dare to insti- gate it themselves. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of articles on the United States immigration policy.) By NORMA SUE WOLFE Daily Staff 'Writer THE TREND in United States immigration laws over the past 75 years has refi.ected the single pressure-fear.- With the development of immi- gration legislation, liere has been less interest in the improvement of the nation as a whole and more in economic self-improvement; less in "desirability" and more in "practicality;" less in furthering the ideals of a democracy and more in yielding to a pressure called fear . . . fear of economic, social, moral, political, religious, and racial domination by masses of "foreign;rs." ' * * * IMMIGRANTS make for an overstocked labor market, keep down wages, substitute for native strike-breakers, and thus injure the natives socially, he argued. As for moral and religious injury, he part of the irony of the present system is the fact that both those persons favoring and opposing it make use of economic theories for the bases of their arguments. THE FIRST economic school premises its attitudes toward im- migration upon the need for additional labor. If the entrance of an immigrant will cause indus- trial displacement, such entrance should be denied, they believe. The second school of. economic thought, composed largely of new immigrants and older stock who recall the part foreign-born have played in American history, has developed a number of answers to these cries for even more limiting legislation. They claim the United States has become a world force largely because it has welcomed immi- grants who seek to betterthem- selves economically or who en- deavor to escape persecution. Also, much of the native labor force will not perform certain unskilled that it diminished progressively with the swelling volume of the immigration current," one account of the theory reports. While the theory concedes that immigrants, in general, represent a lower standard of living than native American workmen,- Gen. Walker maintained that the na- tives are compelled to choose be- tween two alternatives - either lowering their own standard of living or limiting family size and maintaining the standard. But all people - particularly Americans - resist lowering their standard of living, Gen. Walker argued. Therefore, the American laborer limits the size of his fam- ily. MULTIPLIED by tens of thou- sands, this expedient checks the growth of the population. As a result, there is a greater demand for alien labor to enter certain oc- cupations formerly intended for native children. Furthermore, one's standard of DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Moe Sport Shop, 711 N. University Ave. Orders should be placed immediately. There will be a few vacancies in the Martha Cook Bldg. for the second se- mester, Feb., 1960. Those interested may apply to the Director. For ap- pointment please call NO 2-3225. Today at 4:10 p.m. the Dept. of Speech will present a double bill in the of Music; Natural Resources, 2039 Nat- ural Resources: Pharmacy, 1525 Chem,- Pharm.; Public Health, 3520 School of Public Health; Social Work, Window A, Administration. Students from the above schools should submit their forms at Window A in the Adminis- tration Bldg. for certification. Students who are definitely planning to transfer to the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, School of Educa- tion, School of Music, School of Nurs- ing, College of Architecture and De- sign, or the College of Pharmacy in